TY - JOUR
AU - Macedo,Jorge Braga de
TI - Collective Pegging to a Single Currency: The West African Monetary Union
JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series
VL - No. 1574
PY - 1985
Y2 - March 1985
DO - 10.3386/w1574
UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w1574
L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w1574.pdf
N1 - Author contact info:
Jorge Braga de Macedo
Nova School of Business and Economics
Campus Campolide
1099-032 Campolide, Lisboa
PORTUGAL
Tel: +351-213630778
Fax: +351-213631460
E-Mail: jbmacedo@novasbe.pt
M1 - published as Jorge Braga de Macedo. "Collective Pegging to a Single Currency: The West African Monetary Union," in Sebastian Edwards and Liaquat Ahamed, editors, "Economic Adjustment and Exchange Rates in Developing Countries" University of Chicago Press (1986)
AB - The paper presents a model of a monetary union designed to illuminate monetary and exchange rate policy in the West African Monetary Union (UMOA). Emphasis is placed on the interaction of the members of UMOA with each other, through the common central bank, and on their interaction with France and the rest of the world. As a consequence, the structure of the national economies depends essentially on their size.The relative size of the partners is reflected in the source and type of disturbances as well as in the trade pattern: large countries are not affected by disturbances originating in small countries. Small countries are affected by all external disturbances. The collective nature of the pegging becomes important because the small countries are taken to be of equal size.Using a four-country, two-tier macroeconomic model, it is shown that the pseudo-exchange rate union with the large partner has no effect on the real exchange rates of the small countries but affect their price levels, whereas a full monetary union requires in principle a transfer whose allocation between the two small countries by their common central bank may have real effects. This transfer is precisely provided by the large country, as guarantor of the fixed exchange rate arrangement. When both small countries are in surplus, there is a reverse transfer to the large country, with no monetary consequences. In line with the findings of the model, evidence is provided on monetary allocations in UMOA and on the real exchange rates of its major members, as compared to ot her African countries.
ER -